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Featured Articles

January, 2008
GHF Mirador Featured in International Press

December, 2007
GHF Pingyao Featured in Architectural Digest

October, 2007
GHF Cyrene Featured in The New York Times

September, 2007
GHF Cyrene Featured in Daily Telegraph. Quote from Stefaan Poortman, Manager, International Development

December, 2006
Protecting Precious Places

December, 2006
GHF Mirador Featured in National Geographic

January, 2006
Architecture: Monumental Task: Funding the Race Against Time

January, 2006
Preservation: Sure, It's a Good Thing, but..

More Articles

May, 2008
Saving One Heritage Site at a Time

March, 2008
Awesome Ancient Sites
Ruins not yet ruined by too many tourists

January, 2008
GHF Hampi Featured in The Times of India

November, 2007
Prince Charles visits Ancient Site in Anatolia to Commemorate new Site Museum and Visitors Center

Fall 2007
Saving the Mirador Basin. GHF featured in American Archaeology Magazine

July, 2007
Global Heritage Google Earth Outreach Launch

June, 2007
Site-seeing: Reports from the Field: Along the Nakbe Trail

April, 2007
Fire Alerts Go Global

February, 2007
GHF Mirador: Digging for the Truth "New Maya Revelations" to air on History Channel

January 7, 2007
Destination: Guatemala
Atop the world of the Maya

December 31, 2006
The mystery of Maya's jungle heart

December 15, 2006
GHF Mirador Featured in Daily Mail

Nov, Dec 2006
The Mission for Mirador: Ecoconservationists are working to save Guatemala's wilderness, wildlife, and ruins

September 12, 2006
The United States Department of the Interior and the Government of Guatemala Sign Memorandum of Understanding to Protect Major Maya Archaeological Sites at El Mirador

August, 2006
A Home for the Indus - GHF's support of Indus Valley research, excavations and museums in Gujarat

August 18, 2006
Iraq's ancient gem - GHF mentioned in Arizona Daily Star article

July 4, 2006
Group guarding world's heritage

June 30, 2006
Indus Heritage Center Explores Ancient India Roots

June 17, 2006
Haunted By History - The ruins of a contested capital are still hostage to geopolitics

June, 17, 2006
The Ties That Divide - KARS: Locals dream of reopening the frontier between Turkey and Armenia

May, 2006
On Ancient Walls, a New Maya Epoch

March, 2006
Scanning Our Heritage. Laser Scanning For Cultural Heritage Applications. US Berkeley team scanning GHF Project, Chavín de Huántar

February 25, 2006
GHF Chavin de Huantar Featured on History Channel's 'Digging for the Truth'

February 10, 2006
Into The Wild - Searching The Jungle For Buried Mayan Treasure In Guatemala

January 25, 2006
$10m Museum to Re-Visit an Ancient Civilisation

January 17, 2006
Flip side of World Heritage status

December 24, 2005
GHF and Jindal Group to rebuild Hampi

December 20, 2005
GHF Founding Investor Bill Draper Featured in San Francisco Chronicle
Draper Fellowship Awarded to Global Heritage Fund in 2003

December 10, 2005
Running after fabulous ruins - Global Heritage Fund featured in The Hindu for work in Hampi UNESCO World Heritage site, Karnataka, India

November 25, 2005
GHF's Conservation in Shanxi Province Featured in Wall Street Journal - 'History's Last Salvation'

November, 2005
Global Heritage Fund Kars Heritage Program Featured on CNN Turkey

November 12, 2005
In Guatemala, A Battle Over Logs And a Lost Kingdom. Mr. Hansen Aims to Preserve Vast Mayan Ruin as Park; Skeptical, Villagers Fight

October 5 2005
Jeff Morgan's global approach to preservation could bring tourism, stability to postwar Iraq. Cornell University Chronicle Online article

October 2005
Return to Cyrene. GHF Funding Assists GIS Mapping of Cyrene

August 24, 2005
Kars wants to reopen its border on the Caucases

May 2005
Saving Our Global Heritage. GHF's CEO, Jeff Morgan, Featured in Gentry Magazine. (1.57 PDF)

April 28, 2005
Repairing Lost Monuments in Vietnam. GHF featured on ABC Vietnam special
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March 31, 2005
El Mirador Nominated as World Heritage Site. ElPeriodico article

March 31, 2005
El Mirador to be declared cultural heritage. Siglo article

April 18, 2005
Layers of clustered apartments hide artifacts of ancient urban life City on Turkish plains a major draw for 'goddess tours'

April, 2005
Set in Stone. Can Jeff Morgan save the world through enlightened tourism? (766k PDF)

April, 2005
Before It's Ruined: Northern Vietnam. You can lose the crowds at stunning My Son Sanctuary and Bach Ma National Park. (461k PDF)

March 30, 2005
Come and See. An increasing number of US and UK charities are organising donor field trips, which appeal to wealthy donors who want to see their cash in action rather than go to expensive fundraising diners. GHF featured in Third Sector article. (379k PDF)

Feb 11, 2005
How much difference does UNESCO make?

Jan/Feb 2005
Stone Temple Secrets. What happened in the underground labyrinth of ancient Peru? Archaeologist John Rick gets to the bottom of a 3,000-year-old mystery.

Oct 20 , 2004
From Ancient Ruins To Tourist Destinations

2005
Local man fights to protect cultural sites

"Saving Our Global Heritage" - the book
"Saving Our Global Heritage" - the book
 
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Iraq's ancient gem

An Army captain from Tucson, seeking archaeology Ph.D. from UA, is assigned to protect 2,000-year-old ruins that may someday draw tourists

Arizona Daily Star

By Carol Ann Alaimo
August 18, 2006

Dr. Richard Hansen

Far removed from explosives and insurgents, Army Capt. Jesse Ballenger is fighting a different war in Iraq.

The National Guard member from Tucson is on a mission to protect one of the nation's historic jewels, an ancient city that one day could be a tourism draw and job creator for future generations of Iraqis.

Ballenger, a doctoral candidate in archaeology at the University of Arizona when he's not in camouflage, has found himself in the midst of Army efforts to safeguard the famed Hatra ruins, a 2,000-year-old walled compound rising from the desert in less-turbulent northern Iraq.

Unlike troops stationed in violent regions, Ballenger works in a relatively safe rural area. Soldiers there have been able to spend more time on reconstruction work.

Preserving Iraq's antiquities wasn't what Ballenger thought he'd be doing when he was deployed last November with the Phoenix-based 153rd Field Artillery Brigade.

For one thing, his main Army job is in supplies and logistics. And academically, he's more interested in ice age creatures, such as the now-extinct mammoths that once roamed Southern Arizona.

Still, when military leaders learned of his background, Ballenger was tapped to help secure the half-buried Mesopotamian city that hails from a time before Islam.

"I never expected to be using my archaeology training here," the 35-year-old Midtown resident said in a recent telephone interview from Iraq.

"Somehow it came up, and the next thing I know my commander was talking to other commanders, and here I am."

Hatra is deemed a site of worldwide importance by the Global Heritage Fund, a nonprofit group that aims to identify and preserve places of major historical significance.

The city is about 50 miles southwest of Mosul, between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, and is on the Silk Road, a millenniums-old trade route that connected the Far East, the Middle East and Europe.

As such, it was a place where cultures converged and cross-pollinated. Greek, Roman, Sumerian and Persian influences can be seen in Hatra's columns and arches, and in shrines and temples dedicated to different deities.

Ballenger has been designing a new perimeter fence for the 700-plus-acre site to replace crumbling barriers built in the 1970s by Saddam Hussein's government. For now, he said, the area is guarded by machine-gun-toting Iraqi police and civilians who have a hard time protecting the porous six-mile perimeter.

Ballenger also has to make sure the ruins are not damaged during the re-fencing process.

The site, which was partially excavated and restored by previous Iraqi rulers, sees intruders from time to time, he said. But much of the ancient city remains underground, covered by centuries of sandstorms.

Back in Tucson, Ballenger's university colleagues are applauding his overseas exploits.

"We at UA are very proud of what Jesse is doing," said anthropology professor Mary Stiner, one of Ballenger's academic advisers.

Hatra is a historical treasure-trove, Stiner said, and right now, the U.S. Army is probably in the best position to ensure its safety.

In wartime, "it is almost impossible for conventional research or conservation work to be done," she said.

"So any contribution by military personnel is really the only immediate hope for protecting these precious archaeological sites."

For Americans hearing daily reports of devastation in Iraq, it may be hard to imagine anyone wanting to vacation there.

But in the Middle East, Hatra already is known as a tourist attraction. For example, the Web site of a travel agency in Amman, Jordan, describes it as a place of "stunning beauty," widely regarded as "the loveliest ancient monument in Iraq."

Ballenger said he wants to do whatever he can to help the Iraqis recover from war and go on to the best possible future.

"Whether we got off to a good start in Iraq doesn't matter now," said Ballenger, who has a wife, Rebecca, 34; a son, Parrish, 6; and a daughter, George, 4, awaiting his return home this fall.

"Things have got to get better here, one way or another, and I am very committed to doing my part to make that happen," Ballenger said.

In the future, Hatra could rival Rome, Pompeii or the Parthenon in Greece as a sightseeing destination, he said.

"Historical tourism is a gigantic industry. The thought of one day opening this up to global visitation is pretty spectacular."

Please direct media inquiries to:
GHF Press press@globalheritagefund.org or (650) 325 7520

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